
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Tim Malefyt has an amazing ability to make the familiar strange.
He does this by doing deep, ethnographic research, helping brands uncover hidden consumer truths through a combination of carefully constructed activities and thoughtful conversation.
As a business anthropologist, Tim’s research methodologies and key findings have helped re-energize a number of big name brands across multiple categories, including Campbell’s, Gillette, FedEx, HBO, Revlon, PepsiCo, Cadillac, Crayola, and New Balance.
For Tim, context is everything.
If you want to understand a person’s behavior, you have to talk to them in the right context. That means getting them out of the focus group room, putting away the interrogation pad of paper, and talking with people in the environment where the behavior in question naturally takes place.
Because as Tim puts it, “It is in the doing, in the action, that the ‘knowledge of the body’ starts to come through.”
Some of my favorite aha moments talking with Tim include:
Show Notes:
Below are links to books, and other inspiring ideas that came up during our conversation.
Tim’s favorite recent book: The Overstory by Richard Powers
Another great book: Metaphors We Live By by George Lakoff and Mark Johnson
5
66 ratings
Tim Malefyt has an amazing ability to make the familiar strange.
He does this by doing deep, ethnographic research, helping brands uncover hidden consumer truths through a combination of carefully constructed activities and thoughtful conversation.
As a business anthropologist, Tim’s research methodologies and key findings have helped re-energize a number of big name brands across multiple categories, including Campbell’s, Gillette, FedEx, HBO, Revlon, PepsiCo, Cadillac, Crayola, and New Balance.
For Tim, context is everything.
If you want to understand a person’s behavior, you have to talk to them in the right context. That means getting them out of the focus group room, putting away the interrogation pad of paper, and talking with people in the environment where the behavior in question naturally takes place.
Because as Tim puts it, “It is in the doing, in the action, that the ‘knowledge of the body’ starts to come through.”
Some of my favorite aha moments talking with Tim include:
Show Notes:
Below are links to books, and other inspiring ideas that came up during our conversation.
Tim’s favorite recent book: The Overstory by Richard Powers
Another great book: Metaphors We Live By by George Lakoff and Mark Johnson
43,969 Listeners
43,483 Listeners
9,257 Listeners
30,224 Listeners
111,917 Listeners
849 Listeners
3,998 Listeners
9,190 Listeners
170 Listeners
36 Listeners
5,414 Listeners
2,134 Listeners
15,335 Listeners
3,364 Listeners
1,016 Listeners